Litcius/Paper detail

Hippocampal encoding of memories in human infants

Tristan S. Yates, Jared Fel, Dawoon Choi, Juliana E. Trach, Lillian Behm, Cameron T. Ellis, Nicholas B. Turk‐Browne

2025Science42 citationsDOI

Abstract

Humans lack memories for specific events from the first few years of life. We investigated the mechanistic basis of this infantile amnesia by scanning the brains of awake infants with functional magnetic resonance imaging while they performed a subsequent memory task. Greater activity in the hippocampus during the viewing of previously unseen photographs was related to later memory-based looking behavior beginning around 1 year of age, suggesting that the capacity to encode individual memories comes online during infancy. The availability of encoding mechanisms for episodic memory during a period of human life that is later lost from our autobiographical record implies that postencoding mechanisms, whereby memories from infancy become inaccessible for retrieval, may be more responsible for infantile amnesia.

Topics & Concepts

Childhood amnesiaAmnesiaEncoding (memory)Episodic memoryPsychologyAutobiographical memoryNeuroscienceHippocampusFunctional magnetic resonance imagingHippocampal formationChildhood memoryCognitive psychologyRecallHuman memoryLong-term memoryCognitionMemory and Neural MechanismsMemory Processes and InfluencesIdentity, Memory, and Therapy